Fighting windmills? Go on.

Biutiful (2010)

I am what they call a “movie junkie”. I love watching movies, showing movies, discussing movies. Now I’ve decided to also write about them. I’m not a professional, I just want to share what I like and don’t like, while you can agree or disagree. So, let’s begin.

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“If in the first act you have hung a pistol on the wall, then in the following one it should be fired. Otherwise don’t put it there.” A.P. Chekhov

Biutiful

Description: Uxbal (Javier Bardem) is a middle aged man trying his best to raise his two children, deal with a mentally unstable ex-wife (Maricel Álvarez) and earn money on all kinds of jobs to feed his family. Along with the usual problems appears a new struggle – he is diagnosed with cancer.

What I think: I don’t like detailed descriptions of movies, as well as teasers. In my opinion, they often spoil the whole impression, giving too much information about the movie. But Biutiful is one of the films that can not be spoiled. It is an unusual story of a seemingly usual man, which will not leave you indifferent, but will not load your brain with ugly pictures either – no, it is pretty merciful to the sensitive eye of the viewer. It will give you a whole variety of emotions: you will laugh and cry, get creeps and find yourself enjoying ugliness because it suddenly seems… beautiful. You might even start talking to the characters, asking them not to do certain things. Or it’s just me.

Beautiful camerawork is probably the first thing one notices – live and deep shots make the nicest picture. Dynamic editing is the one to keep you concentrated, because there are simply no irrelevant scenes or long useless shots. Trust me, you will not want to look at your watch to check what time it is, because all you will care about at the moment is how not to miss a detail. Dialogues are clever and humorous when needed. The last line of the movie should also leave its impression on you. And by the way, don’t expect to see Barcelona the way it’s usually depicted. In Biutifulwe see its ugly side.

Javier Bardem is climbing my rating of favorite actors as fast as no one else before. Of course, this role did not allow him to blow our minds again as in The Sea Insideor Love in the Time of Cholerabut he is still natural and, you can tell, knows what he’s doing. Maricel Álvarez, for whom Biutiful became the second movie she starred at, did a good job playing the weirdly unattractive and completely “coocoo” towards her kids and the world around Marambra, Uxbal’s ex-wife.

About the creators: One of the reasons I love Iñárritu for, is the special yet every time different style he holds on to. Whether it’s Amores Perros, 21 Gramsor Babel you can tell his hand, but it’s still new, fresh and impressive. He finds no need to subtitle dialogues in foreign languages, because you don’t get subtitles in real life, he puts important details throughout the movie, so you have to watch it closely and more importantly – absolutely every “pistol” he hangs on the wall eventually fires.